TAIPEI, Taiwan — Taiwan has rejected South Africa's demand that it move its representative office in the country from the capital, Pretoria, to the commercial center of Johannesburg, in the latest attempt by the self-governing island republic to push back against Chinese moves to diplomatically isolate it.
Taiwan Foreign Ministry spokesperson Jeff Liu said at a news conference on Tuesday that the demand to move or shut the office violated a 1997 agreement between the sides on the location of their mutual representative offices following the severing of formal diplomatic relations.
''Facing this kind of unreasonable demand, our side cannot grant our acceptance,'' Liu said.
South Africa maintains a liaison office in Taiwan's capital, Taipei, and the sides have a strong commercial relationship. The offices function as de-facto embassies and consulates since the two sides lack formal diplomatic ties. They were broken when South Africa cut diplomatic ties with Taiwan to establish relations with China.
Taiwan maintains such missions in all major nations but has just five in Africa, where China has been increasing its presence by building roads, railways and other infrastructure. In 2017, Nigeria ordered Taiwan's liaison office to move from the administrative capital of Abuja to the commercial center of Lagos and Taiwan complied.
Liu repeated Foreign Minister Lin Chia-lung's avowal at the legislature on Monday that Taiwan ''was prepared for all eventualities'' over the demand. The office is Taiwanese property and Taipei retains the right to determine its location and status, Lin and Liu said.
China, which claims Taiwan as its own territory that must be annexed by force if necessary, relentlessly seeks to minimize Taiwan's international representation, although the self-governing island republic maintains robust unofficial relations with the U.S. and other major nations.
South Africa confirmed last week that it had asked Taiwan to move its liaison office, in a demand seen purely as a concession to China, which has used its influence to keep Taiwan out of the United Nations and affiliated branches such as the World Health Organization, and limit its formal diplomatic partners to just 11 countries and the Vatican.